Vintage cookbooks dispensed medical advice

In modern times, if you are sick you generally head to the
doctor. But in the 1800s, doctors weren't always available, so
people had to rely on other sources for their medical advice. As it
happens, they often turned to cookbooks, according to Atlas Obscura.

As you might expect, some of the remedies are dubious at
best. The Prudent Housewife, published in the early
1800s by Lydia Fisher, "advises a soak in warm vinegar, and
then applying a paste of stale beer grounds, oatmeal, and hog's
lard every day" to treat a sprain. To cure an earache, the book
recommends blowing tobacco smoke into the ear - a remedy that
sounds particularly unwise.

These vintage books were more than just cookbooks or even
medical tomes. They also provided instructions on how to brew beer,
how to preserve foods by pickling, and how to manage bees, making
them all-in-one home instruction manuals, While they make for
fascinating reading today, they are less useful for advice on how
to treat ailments. I will skip the leeches recommended to cure a
headache - thank goodness for aspirin and
ibuprofen!